he reached muscle failure, she wouldn’t bother to care.
“Suit yourself,” she said before making her way, hand over careful hand, to the knob she thought might point them in the right direction.
It wasn’t until several knobs later, after climbing and then descending several feet of the cliff that she found what she was looking for. The knob she’d turned pointed directly down. Shea moved so she could get a good look.
There below her, on a rock outcropping, the top of which could only be seen from the spot Shea currently clung to, was the circle with the wavy line inside of it. The outcropping in question was sandwiched between two other rocks that jutted out from the cliff sheltering the one with the symbol. She would have to descend between the two mammoth rocks to get to the column with the symbol.
“Found it,” she shouted back at Trenton where he was resting on a ledge several feet away.
“Finally.”
She began her descent. She was almost to the first rock when there was a shout from below.
“Eagles. The eagles are coming.”
Shea looked up, her heart in her throat.
Trenton leaned over the side of his ledge. “Get to the symbol and open the cavern.”
She clung to the side, her face upturned. He was a sitting duck where he was. The eagles could snatch him right off that ledge.
“Go, I’ll be right behind you.”
There was nothing Shea could do but listen. She climbed faster, stopping only for the briefest second to make sure that Trenton was following her. His face was a mask of concentration as he descended as fast as he could.
Shea was in the shade of the two rocks, her handholds suddenly cool under her hands. She was still several feet up when the sun was blocked by a giant pair of wings. An eagle’s head thrust between the crevasses, the beak closing inches from Shea’s face.
A loud squawk sounded and then the head withdrew only to be replaced by another bird’s, this one smaller with a cream-colored head that shaded to gold near the neck. It had several brown spots around its neck and chest. Using its smaller size, it darted inside, its beak growing larger and larger as Shea watched in horror. She yelped and jerked back as the hard beak brushed against her. That jerk was what saved her, the bird snapping at air as Shea fell the last few feet to the rock pillar.
She landed hard, the breath exploding out of her. No time to hurt. She needed to get moving and protect herself. Rolling to her side, she crouched as she looked above. The eagles both tried to thrust their heads inside, only to get in each other’s way. The bigger eagle flared its wings and let out an ear-piercing shriek. The smaller one answered its challenge with a full-throated cry of its own. It dived to the side, the bigger one following with another shriek. They circled above, intent on a furious battle as they dived at one another.
Shea didn’t question her luck, grateful that the two were more concerned with defending their territory than picking her off.
She turned back to the symbol below her—a circle filled with another circle and bisected by the wavy line. She’d found what she was looking for, now she just needed to make it work.
The eagles above broke off their aerial battle, disappearing as they dove at the ground below. Shea hoped the Trateri out there managed to evade them long enough for her to figure this out.
According to the story that Shea could remember, the entrance responded to the fire of the great eye and the blood of the chosen children. The second part should be easy enough. Whatever made her a pathfinder should open this thing. The first part though—what in all the Broken Lands was the fire of the great eye. Was it fire? That had to be too easy.
“You figure this out yet?” Trenton shouted down at her, his head peering over the side of one of the stone monoliths.
“You’re alive?” The question popped out of Shea before she could censor herself.
“Not for long if you don’t get this thing open.”
“I’m working on it.”
“Work faster.”
Shea dragged her foot across the stone, brushing away any debris that had accumulated over the years. The symbol itself was in pretty good shape, the white paint showing no sign of erosion or damage.
“Shea, you need to get this open.”
“I told you I’m working on it.”
She looked up. Trenton’s face was